Naval chief’s US visit must bring clarity to defence ties
Obama to Trump and Delhi has moved from Manmohan Singh to Narendra Modi.
Domestic political compulsions, constraints and priorities have led to the India-us defence bi-lateral receiving episodic attention and the bureaucracies on both sides have moved in a routine manner and the word sluggish is not invalid. Absent a clear strategic appreciation of what each side expects from the other for the long term (say 30 years ) and a visible high-level political resolve, by and large the defence relationship has been largely confined to the sale of major platforms from the US to India through the G2G (government to government) route and a range of military exercise involving all three armed forces, with Malabar being the flagship program.
The last substantive visit by a senior US cabinet member to India was that of former US defence secretary Ashton Carter in April 2016 and the phrase ‘strategic handshake’ was the leitmotif of an ambitious visit that began in Goa.
Carter in an earlier avatar in the US DOD (Department of Defence) had spearheaded the DTTI (defence technology transfer initiative) and this was expected to harmonise with the Modi advocacy of ‘Make in India.’
Yet, an objective and non-partisan review of the strategic, long-term policy orientation and prioritisation of big ticket policy issues in the defence sector on the Modi watch, which is now in its last lap would point to very little substantive progress.
India and the US are unable to go beyond the glass-ceiling of tactical engagement (Malabar) and South Block remains diffident about identifying what it seeks from the US in the longterm and the political apex remains distracted by continuous electioneering.
Paradoxically the commitment to ‘strategic autonomy’ is asserted, on occasion in a defiant manner eben as the import bill for military inventory from diverse sources is climbing.
Hopefully the outcome of the Lanba visit will provide some clarity about the degree to which India and the US can revisit the June 2005 defence agreement and harmonize it with the Carter led DTTI and identify the lowhanging fruit that are politically acceptable to both sides. But in the current wiring of India’s higher defence management – the Chairman COSC is not part of the policy related decision-making loop !